• stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Something about dark soul inherently runs counter to Lovecraftian nightmares, the whole point of dark souls is bo matter how unimaginably horrible and disturbing the boss is you can eventually overcome it where Lovecraft was more it doesn’t matter what you do you couldn’t possibly hope to imagine the being in front of you and this whole universe is just a dream of a much larger threat anyway defeating this thing isn’t even conceivable.

      • UnrepentantAlgebra@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        It’s an interesting thought but you gotta admit it would be silly to have a boss in a game that you absolutely cannot beat. Like your character just gives in to madness/despair as soon as you encounter the boss.

        Now maybe if you had a dark souls boss fight while a different big unimaginable entity tries to catch up with you might be interesting. But that also might just be a countdown timer on the boss fight which could be lame if not done well.

      • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Counter-point: there are always unassailable forces in Dark Souls. Giant immortal trees, Gods who disguise their siblings corpses and paint you as a murderer if you try to do anything about it, the fading light of the age of fire, actual countless giant “amygdala” creatures bigger than the one you get to fight in Bloodborne.

        There is always this sense that no matter how much you fight, nothing really changes. It’s just a slightly less populated ruin.

      • fishbone@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 months ago

        Darkest dungeon does it well. Nothing is unbeatable, but the odds are stacked against you and the stress mechanic snowballs things pretty hard.

        Last dungeon I ran, I had to decide whether to try to save an irrational team member and risk stressing everyone else out, or let him die of a heart attack to salvage the others.

        Leads to a lot of “This is insane, I shouldn’t be here” moments.